Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger

Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger

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anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
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Being the 1st of May it was 23 years to the day we lost Ayrton Senna and as we all know also Roland Ratzenberger which was 23 years ago yesterday.

It will continue to go down as one of the worst weekends in F1 history as losing one driver was bad enough but two was horrendous.

R.I.P Ayrton and R.I.P Roland.




anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
quotequote all
And the yearly merry-go-round of which day was the worst in F1 history continues.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
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See the bank holiday grumps are out in force.

Stuck behind caravans or something today?

biggrin

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
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slipstream 1985 said:
Does this really need to be brought up every year?
I am sure your parents think the same every year when your birthday comes around.

biggrin

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
quotequote all
LaurasOtherHalf said:
I have some wonderful memories of Ayrton Senna from my childhood and I do remember him each year on the anniversary of his death.

Senna a God? I don't think he'd have said that himself but he was a striking force of nature and as motorsport fans I personally just think we are lucky that he chose to apply himself to "our" sport-I think he would have revolutionised whatever he decided to do in his all too short life, it just so happened it was motorsport.
Well said mate smile

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
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acer12 said:
With a statement like that I assume you think f1 only started in the 90s, if not then you are very naive and should do a bit of reading.
Have you read it correctly??

"ONE" of the worst.

If you think it was not a terrible weekend then you clearly have issues.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Monday 1st May 2017
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dr_gn said:
It was - obviously - one of the worst weekends in F1 history. among other things, two drivers lost their lives, one a triple world champion and household name.

Sure, there have been other terrible F1 weekends, but Imola '94 is *undoubdtedly* ONE of them. Why the outrage at a perfectly reasonable statement?
Thank you.

All I wanted to do was highlight the passing of Senna and Ratzenberger but clearly people have issues with this.

Just very sad.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Tuesday 2nd May 2017
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p1esk said:
Le Mans 1955.

Monza 1961.
Have you read my post???

"It will continue to go down as ONE of the worst weekends in F1 history"

Where are you getting Le Mans?? When was Le Man an F1 event??

Next you will be quoting plane crashes.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

55 months

Friday 5th May 2017
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Evangelion said:
Spa 1960 - one driver badly injured in practice, two killed during the race, another injured badly enough to end his career and leave him paralysed for many years.
Just to remind you.

Qualifying Friday April 29th 1994 Rubens Barrichello has a terrible 140 mph crash at Variante Bassa which knocked him out. Barrichello was lucky to only have a broken nose and his arm in a sling.

Qualifying Saturday April 30th 1994 Roland Ratzenberger failed to negotiate the Villeneuve curva and as we know died.

Race day Sunday 1st May 1994 At the start of the race there was a serious crash when J.J. Lehto stalled his Benetton on the grid. Pedro Lamy, starting from further back on the grid, had his view of the stationary Benetton blocked by other cars and hit the back of Lehto's car, causing bodywork and tyres to fly into the air. Parts of the car went over the safety fencing designed to protect spectators at the startline causing minor injuries to nine people.

Lap 7 As we all know Ayrton Senna crashed at Tamburello corner and was fatally injured.

Approximately 10 minutes after Senna's crash, the Larrousse team mistakenly allowed one of their drivers, Érik Comas, to leave the pits despite the circuit being closed under red flags. Marshals frantically waved him down as he approached the scene of the accident travelling at "pretty much full speed". Eurosport commentator John Watson described the incident as "the most ridiculous thing I have ever seen at any time in my life". Comas avoided hitting any of the people or cars that were on the circuit but after going over towards Senna's accident scene, he was so distressed at what he saw that he withdrew from the race.

Second start

On lap 48, Michele Alboreto came in for a pit stop, but as he left, the rear-right wheel came loose from the Minardi as it left the pit lane, striking two Ferrari and two Lotus mechanics, who were left needing hospital treatment.

Things at Imola were extremely bad but it could have been even worse. I really do not see much of a difference between Spa 1960 and Imola 1994 when highlighting the whole weekends events.

Both race weekends were awful but we can't ever say one is worse than another.




Edited by anonymous-user on Friday 5th May 13:55